25. september 1994 var en søndag under stjernetegnet for ♎. Det var 267 dag på året. Præsident for USA var William J. (Bill) Clinton.
Hvis du blev født på denne dag, er du 31 år gammel. Din sidste fødselsdag var den torsdag den 25. september 2025, 265 dage siden. Din næste fødselsdag er fredag den 25. september 2026, om 99 dage. Du har levet i 11.588 dage, eller omkring 278.131 timer, eller omkring 16.687.916 minutter eller omkring 1.001.274.960 sekunder.
25th of September 1994 News
Nyheder, som de udkom på forsiden af New York Times på 25. september 1994
NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 25 September 1994
International 3-19 A FIREFIGHT IN HAITI At least 10 Haitians were killed in two clashes involving civilians, Haitian police and American marines, U.S. officials said. One American was reported wounded. 1 HAITI BEYOND ARISTIDE Even if the exiled President of Haiti is restored to office, there will be major problems, with many institutions in ruins and the military still a potential trouble source. 16
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NEWS SUMMARY
Date: 26 September 1994
International A3-11 CHAOS GROWS IN HAITIAN CITY Hundreds of Haitians, emboldened by the deaths of 10 members of the security forces in a firefight Saturday with U.S. marines, ransacked police stations in Cap-Haitien, Haiti's second-largest city. A1
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INSIDE
Date: 26 September 1994
Fear of Plague Ebbs in India The city of Surat began what officials described as "a return to normalcy" after the panic brought by an outbreak of plague. Page A6. Simpson Trial Ready to Begin After nearly two months of preliminary legal skirmishes and a deluge of publicity, O. J. Simpson will finally go on trial this week. Page A12. Relief From Competiition The demise of a bill to overhaul communications law gives phone and cable companies a reprieve from rivals. News Analysis, page D1. Sweden Defeats U.S. With Pete Sampras unable to continue because of an injury, the United States lost to Sweden in the Davis Cup semifinals. SportsMonday, C2.
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Christopher, Carter In 'Friendly' Talks
Date: 25 September 1994
After a week of news stories suggesting that the two men were at odds over foreign policy, Secretary of State Warren Christopher had a "friendly and completely constructive" meeting today with former President Jimmy Carter today in Plains, Ga., the State Department said. A State Deptartment official said Mr. Christopher had praised Mr. Carter "for his efforts to help negotiate the arrangements that allowed the U.S.-led force to land in Haiti without opposition."
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Paula Escarameia and James Silver
Date: 25 September 1994
Paula Ventura de Carvalho Escarameia, a daughter of Antonio Jose de Carvalho Escarameia and Maria Isaura da Cruz Ventura of Lisbon, was married there on Monday to James William Silver, the son of William Silver of New York and the late Linda Silver. Dina Inacio, a civil registrar of Lisbon, officiated at the Hotel da Lapa. Ms. Escarameia, 34, is keeping her name. She graduated from the Portuguese Catholic University and received a law degree and a Master of Laws from Harvard University. She was recently appointed legal counsel to the Portuguese Mission to the United Nations in New York..
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What's the Opposite of Grunge?
Date: 25 September 1994
An early fall look: suits with longer jackets worn by impeccably groomed women. It may look out of step with the mix-and-match sportswear generation, but these punctiliously turned-out suits remain the backbone of new fall wardrobes for women who wear the clothes of couture designers. While jacket lengths may fluctuate, these stylish women long ago decided the most flattering hem length for them was just above the knee. For shorter skirts, Chanel solved the proportion problem by creating an uninterrupted line with "stocking shoes" in tweed (right and above). The news is in the subtlety of change: one jacket, far right, suggests a corsetlike fit; the chalk-stripe beauty, above, could dominate a board room full of London bankers. A whimsical note is the cutout back filled in with net on a black suit, center.
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For 58 Years, a Window on Life's Journey
Date: 26 September 1994
By Deirdre Carmody
Deirdre Carmody
In 1936, Henry Luce assembled a team in great secrecy for the start-up of what was known only as Project X. The team included a young German photographer named Alfred Eisenstaedt, already known for his portraits of statesmen and his photographs of big news events. Project X became Life magazine, introduced on Nov. 23, 1936. And Mr. Eisenstaedt became one of the great photographers of the century. The two names became inextricably linked.
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The Imaginary Railroad
Date: 25 September 1994
PICTURE YOURSELF ON A TRAIN IN A station, with grain elevators and coal-embossed skies, and you'll begin to get an idea of what Michael Flanagan is up to. A New York artist, Flanagan has compiled an album of photographs documenting the stations along the aging Buffalo & Shenandoah and Powhatan Railroads, in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia. Except they aren't photographs at all but paintings, executed in a weathered trompe l'oeil style and inscribed with dictionary excerpts, news clippings and eyewitness details. The rail lines and stations don't exist either: they are entirely fictional, drawn from random snapshots, Flanagan's imagination and memories of the railroad town that his father grew up in. The hand-written marginalia (presented here in captions), the woman named Anna who wrote them and her love affair with the photographer, a brakeman named Russell McKay -- they are all fiction, too.
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The High Cost of Broadway
Date: 25 September 1994
By William Harris
William Harris
ONLY TWO NEW MUSIcals are scheduled for Broadway this fall, but when they open, it will be with a flourish -- of new ticket prices. The top price for "Show Boat," now in previews and opening Oct. 2 at the Gershwin Theater, will be $75. Andrew Lloyd Webber's "Sunset Boulevard," which begins previews Nov. 7 and opens at the Minskoff Theater on Nov. 17, will have a top price of $70.
This is not news, of course, to the producers of other shows. Prices at several established Broadway musicals are already inching up from the average top of $65.
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In America; Wrong Answer on Human Rights
Date: 25 September 1994
By Bob Herbert
Bob Herbert
If the Public Broadcasting Service had the choice of televising a human rights series produced by a highly respected Emmy-award-winning team or a quiz show, which would it choose? The events in Haiti give this question added significance. PBS was created in 1969 to provide an alternative to commercial television's mind-numbing, politically timid fare. In promotional material sent out this year as part of their 25th anniversary celebration, executives boasted that "PBS programs, created by public television stations, independent producers and foreign sources, set the standard for quality television; television that respects and nurtures the intelligence of the viewer."
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